So, we measured people’s score on depression, anxiety, stress and happiness. How do they relate to the music they listen to? Some standouts: people who listen to punk seem more anxious, and people who listen to soundtracks seem less depressed, whereas people who listen to rock seem more depressed. Why could this be?
As you can see, we ended up with quite a wide variety of data. The scores on the questionnaire vary enough to give us some interesting results, although we are happy to see that most of the people who answered our questionnaire feel happy and aren’t stressed :). Our data is a bit biased towards students, which you can tell from the age. Students will likely listen to different kind of music than the general population, so it will be interesting to see if this is will be a confounder in the analysis.
What is known so far?
Music can elicit positive and negative emotions, and can also be a tool for emotion regulation. (Cook et al, 2018)
Studies have found a relationship between various genres of music (rock, metal, hip hop) and behaviours, such as antisocial behaviour, vulnerability to suicide, and drug use. (Scherer et al., 2001)
Music preference is indicative of an underlying emotional disturbance or vulnerability (Scherer et al., 2001)
Through cognitive appraisal, the aesthetic context of music is recognized and emotions are induced (Kawakami, Furukawa, Katahira & Okanoya, 2013).
Another study found out why sad music exists in the first place (Kawakami, Furukawa, Katahira & Okanoya, 2013). They found that when listening to sad music, people’s felt emotions are different from the perceived emotions. One of their explanations for this was that people felt pleasant emotions when listening to sad music due to something called sweet anticipation. People expected to feel sad emotions and due to having successfully predicted this, they experienced pleasant emotions. This comes back to mood adjustment; it implies that people listen to sad music on purpose to feel sad emotions. Two of the same researchers also researched if personality traits relate to people’s consumption of sad music (Kawakami & Katahira, 2015). They found that several sub-components of the personality trait empathy were positively related to the consumption of sad music.
From the theory it follows that there should be some kind of relationship between psychological characteristics and the music people listen to. Although Spotify features are vague and nobody really knows what they mean (including Spotify themselves), they do provide us with interesting statistics on music. To analyse the On Repeat playlists the participants provided us with, we calculated the mean for the Spotify features of every playlist. We then compared these features to the participant’s score on the four psychology questionnaires. What will the songs people listen to on Spotify tell us about their emotional states, and conversely, what will their emotional states tell us about what music they listen to?
To find the patterns, we calculated the correlation between the scores on the questionnaires and the Spotify features. All the significant correlations (below -0.1 and above 0.1) are shown on the left. There seem to be relationships- more happy and anxious people like to listen to more speechy music. Higher depression scores seem to imply lower values of most features, but also liveness- do depressed people dislike concerts or is there something else going on?
text about mood
Kawakami, A., Furukawa, K., Katahira, K., & Okanoya, K. (2013). Sad music induces pleasant emotion. Frontiers in Psychology, 4. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00311
Kawakami, A., & Katahira, K. (2015). Influence of trait empathy on the emotion evoked by sad music and on the preference for it. Frontiers in Psychology, 6. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01541